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Tigers named Ryan Garko as the club’s Vice President of Player Development and Assistant GM

Sounds like Spencer Torkelson will get every opportunity to earn regular role at 1B for Tigers. He's meeting with Tigers hitting coaches in Arizona this week.
Hinch: "We have other options if we need to, but clearly our best team has Spencer Torkelson as a major contributor."
Jason Beck

Spencer Torkelson should never have been promoted to Detroit w/only 1 year of minors exp. under his belt. It was a desperate move by Al Avila to deflect concern over the status of his rebuild.
You now have to consider the mental damage done to Tork by that move. If the new Tiger hitting coaches can get him back on track, it will be a very good statement about the new personnel hired.
Totally Tigers
 
Grab a cocktail before reading this. After all those years of tanking, the Detroit Tigers have 1, count 'em, 1 player in the top 100. Is this more of statement about Al Avila's incompetency, the poor player development system - or are both equally guilty?

The lone ranked Tiger, RHP Jackson Jobe, lands at No. 83 in BA rankings, but players drafted just behind him are No. 5, 10 and 13.

The Tigers were expected to pick Marcelo Mayer but teams were stunned when they passed and selected Jackson Jobe. Mayer ranks #10 in prospects.

Ryan Garko, VP Player Development, certainly has his hands full. This will be a year of trying to undo the damage from the previous regime. How many reclamation project prospects will they be working with?

Totally Tigers
 
https://totallytigers.wordpress.com/2023/01/23/attitude-or-environment/
ATTITUDE OR ENVIRONMENT?
Totally Tigers

As we get closer to spring training, we start to think about all those loose ends from last year. The question marks. The concerns.

The hot topics.

And there is nothing hotter than continued speculation about Spencer Torkelson?s future.

Afterall, he was the #1 draft pick and poster child who would help validate the rationale for why the Tigers decided to tank.

But should we blame Tork for what happened ? or didn?t happen ? last year? Did he burst our bubble?

The answer is no.
 
https://totallytigers.wordpress.com/2023/01/26/five-for-friday-57/
FIVE FOR FRIDAY.
Totally Tigers

Scott Harris continues to dig and address all of the many issues surrounding the Tigers. Some of them more visible than others.

But the problems don?t stop once the 2023 season starts. In fact, many of them will become even more glaring and increasingly in need of a fix.

There have always been stories and examples of some of the problems they?ve never been able to address properly.

Until maybe now.
And that is today?s theme.

If we exclude discussion of the roster, what problems does Scott Harris need to solve that impact the roster the most?

I?ve got my top 5.

CORPORATE CULTURE.

DEPTH.

IDENTICAL HITTERS.

INJURIES.

LEADERSHIP.
 
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/p/preskjo01.shtml
DEEPER DISCUSSIONS.
Totally Tigers

Now that the Detroit Tigers have a new man in charge, the team is spending this year re-evaluating its talent both at the major and minor league levels. Over the past couple years, the ranking of top prospects and the farm system have been falling.

Scott Harris has signed and invited several dozen new players to audition for every slot on the team. Excluding the outfield, there will be 5-9 players trying out for every infield position.

He has also stated that it?s important to give young players more time to play and get at-bats. It?s because there is a lot of talent that needs fresh eyes to re-assess it.

It would also mean that more experienced players will get less playing time.

But what is more important? Playing more experienced players for potentially a better record or taking this year to properly re-evaluate the younger players and see how they fit into the team?s future? Deciding which holes could be filled from inside that will also determine who to draft and which free agents to sign going forward?

Today?s blog addresses this dilemma and allows readers to share their thoughts in more detail. And hopefully, to actively engage with others by responding to their posts and creating back-and-forth discussion threads. The more the merrier!

For this one blog only, you?ve got 6 sentences max to share your thoughts.
Of course, you can respond to as many other readers as you want.

TT will supply the ammunition. One thought-provoking question. Several options provided. One hard choice to be selected. One vote.
Ready?

Should the Tigers priority for the year be wins or assessing/developing talent for next year?

1. Focus on getting the best record possible.

2. Focus on assessing/developing talent.

VOTE
 
https://totallytigers.wordpress.com/2023/02/05/monday-musings-55/
MONDAY MUSINGS.
Totally Tigers

Throughout the week, there are so many smaller stories hitting the media. They may be bite-size, but often they are just as important as the headline-grabbing news. Sometimes, even more.

And that?s what brings me to today. A way to bring them out in the open and invite conversation about some of these subjects.

And that?s the plan for Mondays. Keeping track of these mighty little bits that hit my radar throughout the week and sharing them with you today because
I know one or more will also resonate with you. So, let?s kick off this week?s musings?

You don?t have to watch Ryan Garko in action to understand that there is a whopping difference in how he runs Player Development compared to his predecessor.

You never read any interviews with Dave Littlefield. He didn?t give updates or explain the team?s strategy and progress. Nada.

But now we?re reading lots of interviews with Garko about what is being done in the minors. And he goes into significant detail.

Much of what he discusses is about the Tigers changing how they work with their minor league hitters. He even goes through a list of prospects and details about what they were doing previously and how skills were refined. All very intelligently explained. And the amount of detail is reassuring to fans.

Makes one wonder what Littlefield was actually doing all those years?..
 
Isn't it interesting that so many Detroit Tiger fans are directing more of their anger towards an owner who isn't spending on the roster (but spending a lot on the infrastructure) this year instead of placing the majority of the blame on the former GM who blew the rebuild?

There's certainly enough blame to go around but this team started regressing again over the past year+ under Al Avila. A farm system that now once again ranks at #30 and is described as having no depth other than pitching. And fewer prospects showing up on top 100 lists.

Consider is that this team has taken 1-2 steps backwards and is not yet ready to invest in free agents until the new Front Office digs out of the mess created by the former GM. Will adding a couple new players actually make this team better when there are so many holes to fill?

Totally Tigers
 
https://totallytigers.wordpress.com/2023/02/21/watercooler-wednesday-73/
WATERCOOLER WEDNESDAY.
Totally Tigers

Today, another opportunity for readers to discuss the hottest topics in a forum where thoughtful dialog and a variety of opinions are welcomed.

Let?s create some running conversational threads. And for those of you back in actual offices, here?s a question to take with you ? or use via Zoom ? as you talk to your co-workers.

Here is today?s topic??..

This week, Scott Harris talked to reporters about the Tigers? off-season moves ? most notably the lack of signing recognizable free agents. Here?s how he explained the organization?s rationale:

?Coming off 96 losses, there are no shortcuts back to contention. It starts with putting together a team and an environment that can play competitive baseball every day.

?When we entered the off-season, we were looking for controllable young players who embody the offensive identity we?re working towards. Players who control the strike zone and could help us control the strike zone better as an organization.

?And on the position-player side, it?s really tough to find controllable players at manageable acquisition costs. I didn?t think it made sense for us to invest significant at-bats in veteran players who will not be a part of the team beyond 2023.

?Those at-bats are too valuable for us. We have to invest those current and future at-bats with some of our young players; players like Kerry Carpenter, Ryan Kreidler, Andre Lipcius, Wenceel Perez, Parker Meadows and a lot of the young players already in camp fighting for jobs.

?An area of focus for us is helping players get better. We?re introducing a lot of new things to the players that they?ve never seen before. And with that comes huge opportunity to help them get better, to find those small gains up and down the roster that can net huge returns for the team. That?s going to be our path back to contention and I feel we are off to a good start.?

In summary, Harris is saying that this team has so many needs in order to become respectable that adding a free agent or two will have little to no impact. And that it could actually be detrimental to rebuilding the team. This team is essentially starting from scratch but it is now being assembled with a certain identity and goal.

He hints that this roster will continue to change significantly after this year but the goal is to re-assess younger players who did not get a solid chance to show their potential in previous seasons. That the hope is that many of them will perform better now that the team has better tools and coaches.

And Harris summarized that by adding free agent veterans would only be a temporary band-aid and not a solution. That by actually adding them would set the team back from properly evaluating and developing the young talent currently in the system.

Do you agree with Harris? statements? Is this the best way for the Tigers to move forward? Is re-assessing, developing and testing younger players a better solution than bringing in veterans who may offer a temporary but not lasting fix?

Do you agree with Scott Harris? strategy that the best way for this team to move forward is to focus on developing their young talent?

1. Yes

2. No

VOTE
 
Why is Detroit Tigers Scott Harris and A. J. Hinch emphasizing players who control the strike zone? Let's take 1 example from last year that contributed to an MLB record low offensive record for the team.

Jonathan Schoop's chase rate last year was almost 37% and he struck out 28% of the time. His walk rate was less than 4% which was almost dead last in MLB.

Schoop missed out on getting 40 walks by chasing pitches outside the zone on three-ball counts. Just astoundingly bad. But he wasn't the only one doing this.

Totally Tigers
 
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